Photos / Sounds

What

Observer

Date

Place

(Somewhere...)

Date added

June 24, 2015
01:49 PM EDT

Description

4) The grab: male flies to receptive female, positions parallel to her, and flies her away to a place to mate. These three sequence shots are frame grabs from a Sony video recorder, and represent 0.3 sec.

Photos / Sounds

What

Observer

Date

Place

(Somewhere...)

Date added

June 24, 2015
01:48 PM EDT

Description

3) The grab: male flies to receptive female, positions parallel to her, and flies her away to a place to mate. These three sequence shots are frame grabs from a Sony video recorder, and represent 0.3 sec.

Photos / Sounds

What

Observer

Date

Place

(Somewhere...)

Date added

June 24, 2015
01:47 PM EDT

Description

2) The grab: male flies to receptive female, positions parallel to her, and flies her away to a place to mate. These three sequence shots are frame grabs from a Sony video recorder, and represent 0.3 sec.

Photos / Sounds

What

Observer

Date

Place

Date added

June 24, 2015
01:48 PM EDT

Description

MATING SEQUENCE: 1) Males and females open and rapidly close their wings as what I interpret as a ready-to-mate signal. Male shown is on grass over shallow, swift-running creak about 40mm at deepest point. Ambient air temperature 32.2 C, skies clear and very sunny.

Tags

Photos / Sounds

What

Observer

Date

the past

Place

(Somewhere...)

Date added

November 24, 2012
10:47 PM EST

Description

"Red" iguanas (actually rust to orange) have become common in petshops in the U.S. Once more the extraordinary diversity seen in this "species" makes me wonder when someone will do a systematic study and demonstrate that there are several species of "common" iguanas.